Business Day

SMEs can draw global investors

• African business founders tend to focus on solving problems for their communitie­s, not profit

- Kevin Holliday ● Holliday is MD of Dubaibased start-up accelerato­r C3.

Today, tech giants such as Amazon, Microsoft and Meta have grown to become internatio­nally recognised institutio­ns that support many facets of our everyday lives. But sometimes it’s easy to forget that such organisati­ons were born from a simple idea concocted in the founder’s garage.

Often, truly successful businesses are run by people with the skills, vision and desire to solve a specific problem in their community. This is an area where I believe African start-up founders thrive —when they have the right foundation, purpose and resources in place.

As a member of the adjudicati­on panel for the 2023 MultiChoic­e Africa Accelerato­r programme — an initiative that offers rigorous pitch-readiness training to small-business founders across the continent, in partnershi­p with C3 and EOH — I’ve had the privilege of engaging with 29 driven small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SME) founders.

PASSION

I am astonished by the talent, passion and innovation that we’ve seen. Rooted within the healthtech, agritech, fintech, edutech, circular economy and creative industries, these are agile start-up founders who act quickly to uncover potential and work to leave the world better than they found it — truly living a life of profit for purpose.

This is the second year the programme has worked to multiply the effect of SMEs in Africa, with the first cohort of founder-led start-ups attracting transforma­tive business funding of more than $16m from internatio­nal investors in 2022. With the world’s youngest population and growing internet accessibil­ity, Africa’s future is ripe with possibilit­ies.

But there’s still much work to be done to ensure the continent is recognised as an attractive investment destinatio­n, filled with entreprene­urial potential.

Today, African start-ups attract only a fraction of global venture capital: just 1% of the total global venture capital funding is allocated to the continent. But African SME founders still have a huge effect on the growth and sustainabi­lity of their communitie­s, their region and even their continent.

With the right investment and infrastruc­ture in place, African-born innovation can shape solutions that make a lasting effect worldwide. To ensure the continent can support small businesses effectivel­y, meet its developmen­t goals and create meaningful change globally, Africa needs government, business leaders and global investment in purpose-driven, tech-focused sectors that can support long-term growth.

That’s what makes programmes such as the MultiChoic­e Africa Accelerato­r so impactful. It gives the world a chance to help the next generation of African entreprene­urs working to solve problems at grassroots level. Global investors, specifical­ly in the Middle East, are urgently looking for opportunit­ies to invest in Africa. This group of SMEs has what it takes to bring home even more investment than the previous cohort.

Aside from investors, government­s, such as the United Arab Emirates (UAE) leadership, are keen to boost their nation’s entreprene­urial capabiliti­es with the innovative minds of such start-ups. For instance, the country developed its UAE Centennial Plan 2071, which includes the priority of building a diversifie­d knowledge economy. That is, supporting innovation, entreprene­urship, and high-skill or advanced industries. African start-ups are already way ahead in these areas.

This proves how African start-up skills and business savviness have the potential to whet the appetite of global investors and government­s alike. As we approach the final stages of the programme, the 11 founders chosen to pitch their businesses to internatio­nal investors in Dubai will not just be showcasing their start-ups on the global stage — they will also be representi­ng the quality of African innovation. Investing in Africa is unique and rewarding because the fundamenta­l goal of the African founder is not profit. It is purpose. What makes the Multichoic­e Africa Accelerato­r programme so effective is that it meets founders while they are still deeply connected to their purpose, before helping them to showcase that purpose through pitching for investment. To achieve this, the role of the founder is vital.

When it comes to early-stage investment opportunit­ies, investors are not just looking for a market-disrupting idea, they are analysing the founder. In fact, 80% of the deal comes down to the founder’s ability and credibilit­y. Do they have the right experience? Are they able to ensure the product is fit for market? Will they have the determinat­ion to keep pushing even if times get tough? What’s more, do they have what it takes to grow their business into a market-disrupting success?

Investors also understand that early-stage opportunit­ies are often just the first round of investment. As businesses scale, the opportunit­y to reinvest and refinance grows too. This is why it is crucial that the right founder is at the helm of the ship — someone who will remain reliable, resilient and able to deliver long-term sustainabi­lity.

Above all else, early-stage investors look for passion: the story behind the solution and the purpose at the heart of the profit. That spark will take founders from pitch to profit; from insight to impact.

Investor-founder collaborat­ion goes beyond the balance sheet. At their deepest level, financial partnershi­ps are about finding a personal connection around a common purpose. Start-up founders and venture capital investors need to share a passion for solving the world’s most pressing issues.

This is the connection that founders at the MultiChoic­e Africa Accelerato­r will be looking to evoke in potential investors. A shared vision of a better Africa; a shared passion for enriching lives, and building a better world.

AFRICA ACCELERATO­R GIVES THE WORLD A CHANCE TO HELP THE NEXT GENERATION OF ENTREPRENE­URS

 ?? /123RF/lacheev ?? Showcasing innovation: Eleven SME founders have been chosen by the panel of the MultiChoic­e Africa Accelerato­r to pitch their businesses to internatio­nal investors in Dubai.
/123RF/lacheev Showcasing innovation: Eleven SME founders have been chosen by the panel of the MultiChoic­e Africa Accelerato­r to pitch their businesses to internatio­nal investors in Dubai.

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